Wednesday, November 15, 2006

Operation Tagar - Disaster

In the center the strike on El Tasa continues. Shararah, a flight of 4 MiG-17, drops their bomb load on the Hawk battery, but fails to hit. Of course, having a crippled and damaged plane in the flight did not help. The Su-7 that failed to hit the battery earlier where engaged by a flight of four Neshers and shot to pieces - 3 of 4 Fitters went down in flames for a damaged Nesher. With favorable morale results, the Nesher will most likely continue to press another attack on Shararah. Fortunately the remaining Fitter will be able to dash away at speed six. With the current results in aerial combat the EAF CAP flight J flies southwards to check on another strike. To compensate for the sustained losses I ready two new EAF CAP flights at Cairo West and Inshas. In the southern part the remaining EAF flight is detected, while all attempts on the IAF there went unsuccessful. The image depicts the situation at start of turn 11.
Ben Nun, which recovered from disorder in the admin phase, moved to intercept the interceptors and succeded once more. With two shots the F-4s scored two kills on the MiG-21F-13s. After three air-to-air combats in this part four MiG-21s were shot down and two more damaged for basically no Israeli losses. The last line of defense there will no be the SAM batteries around Beni Suef, as this is most likely to be the target.

The incoming strike at the coast is now engaged by SAMs. With the remaining Armed Escort and Egrof flight the score remains even. One SAM shut down it's radar after an ARM launch and no damage has been dealt out. While a number of missiles were shot at the aggressors, no hits were scored.
Meanwhile the last IAF strike is assembled and seems to be on the way to Suez. Little opposition for this strike has been scratched together. The CAP flight departing from covering El Tasa is available. For ground defense, a Fire Can was shutdown after ARM launch and needs to recover first.

Turn 13 is starting and the EAF is in a bad shape. Of the two strikes versus Israelian installations, only one was hit with a success rating of 3. The losses are already enormous:










FlightTaskAircraftKilledCrippledDamaged
el-MaltBombing22 (AAA,Hawk)--
ShararahBombing4-1 (Hawk)1 (Hawk)
HafizBombing4---
ZakiBombing13 (A2A)--
MikhailCAP4--1 (A2A)
ShuwakriCAP31 (A2A)-1 (A2A)
KamalCAP22 (A2A)--
al-HamidCAP22 (A2A)-1 (A2A)


For the IAF it looks like a great day: only two damaged planes for 10 kills and a number of aborted and disordered EAF flights. Will turn 13 bring more carnage to my EAF forces or will the IAF start to suffer likewise?

Friday, November 10, 2006

Operation Tagar - Dogfight

Today was another rough day for the EAF. al-Hammid, a CAP flight of four MiG-21, popped up to medium altitude to engage a strike package, but was caught while doing so by the IAF CAP Shochat. After a short and fierce fight two MiG-21 went down and one is damaged. Hopefully al-Hammid can make a safe trip home. Of the three MiG-21 flights waiting for the Israelian strike only one remains intact. It managed to fly between the strikers, which are now devoid of CAP.

The EAF strikes continued and one flight of Su-7 dropped their bombs at the Hawk Battery at El Tara. Unfortunately the AAA barrage was to dense and no hits were scored at the site. The hopes now lie on another flight that will engage the ground target later this turn.

Operation Tagar illustrated

This image illustrates the disengaging EAF flight intermixed with the IAF strike. The combat took place between Ben-Nun, a flight of 4 F-4 Phantom fighters on Armed Escrot, and Mikhail, a flight of 4 MiG-21. With a damaged lead aircraft the EAF flight is trying to get to Wadi Al Jandali, a base northwest from the area shown. While the disordered flight may recover and continue operation, it is more likely that it will land.


The overall area where the combat took place shows two more MiG flights and he incoming strike. Flight 100 will most likely be tasked with SEAD and 102 with Armed Escort. The main force consists of 104 an 105 and their escort 103. The detection phase of turn 8 will show if EAF flights F and H will have a chance to engage the raid or will be taken by an IAF surprise strike as happened to Mikhail in turn 7.

In this image the egyptian strikes are shown. To the right two flights are on the way to El Tasa. A HAWK battery is placed there and the shaded red area shows their effective engagement range. Flight B is fully acquired by the battery and will get shot at during the next turns.
To the left el-Malt and Hafiz, two flights of MiG-17, are outbound after bombing the airstrip at Baluza. Their close escort flight Adoub has been surprised by the AAA at Budapest.


Thursday, November 09, 2006

Operation Tagar

The scenario takes place during the Yom Kippur or Ramadan War in 1973 and gives an impression on actions during the second day of the conflict.

Both sides have to attack and defend simultaneously. The IAF is about to strike two air bases and one frontline target while the EAF flies two raids versus installations in the Sinai. I play the Egyptian side in this scenario. After the setup and planning of the stationary air defenses, consisting of SAMs, AAA and radar directed AAA (Fire Cans), I plan the strikes and setup my CAP flights ready at airbases spread over eastern Egypt.

The game commences and from intelligence sources I am aware that the IAF will come from three different areas. Prepared with this knowledge I am able to start four flights of CAP to intercept the raiders. Also the strikes versus the runway at Baluza Airfield and another classified target are assembled.

First contact is made by the CAP flight from Tanta-Birma that intercepts some flights over the Med. One MiG explodes when Israeli Phantoms launch their Sparrows from beyond visual range. This causes quite a bit of confusion and before my pilots can turn and run off, they are engaged once more by the aggressive IAF flight. Fortunately only one MiG is damaged and the remaining aircraft fly back towards homebase, slightly shaken.

In the southern part three flights of MiG wait for six incoming IAF flights. Hidden in the rugged desert terrain, they stay undetected. But once the IAF is in range, the Israelis again seize the initiative and one flight has a badly damaged airplane with no scratch on the Phantoms paintwork.

The outgoing strikes are harrassed by HAWK batteries that cover primary targets in the Sinai. The flight of el-Malt suffers heavy losses: One MiG-17 is shot down before crossing the Suez canal by a HAWK missile and another one by a heavy Flak barrage protecting the airfield. Nevertheless the second flight of the strike manages to score multiple hits on the runway. Though at this moment it is still unclear how much damage is done. This has to be uncovered by a recon flight later in the game. Once the target has been bombed, the departing strike is surprised by a AAA barrage on the coastline. Fortunately the gunners were also surprised and no hits were scored. The second strike is still en route to the target, with one flight dodging incoming missiles from the HAWK batter at El-Tasa.

Elusive Victory

This blog is about after action reports on Elusive Victory, an upcoming game from GMT. My name is Torsten and I do the Vassal module for Elusive Victory.

The game is about the air war between Israel and the Arab Nations from 1967 to 1973. The area covered is the Sinai , Suez Canal and the Nile valley. The air raids that took place in this timespan are heart of the game. In different scenarios players can take either side and either conduct air strikes or organize air defenses . The more complex scenarios allow player to defend and attack at once.